MUCH obliged am I to Mr. Beaton for his very interesting answer to
my question.2 When Mr. Beaton says he does "not know of an instance of
the natural crossing of varieties," I presume he intends to confine his
remark to the plants of the flower garden; for every one knows how
largely the varieties of the Cabbage cross, as is likewise the case (as
I know from careful trial) with Radishes and Onions. It was this fact
which led me to suppose that varieties of flower-garden plants would
naturally cross.

I can quite understand, after reading Mr. Beaton's remarks, that it
would be very difficult, perhaps impossible, to detect such natural
crossing from the degree to which most of these varieties vary. I
should, however, think that those who raise for sale seeds of distinct
varieties of the Hollyhock, Stocks, &c., must know whether it is
indispensable to keep the parent plants apart.

I will not trouble Mr. Beaton again if he will have the kindness to
procure for me answers on one or two points quoted in his paper (June
26, 1860) from the "king of British cross-breeders"—namely, whether I
understand rightly that the white Anemone apennina seeding
in a mass with the blue (Anemone apennina?) produced many
pale shades? For this seems to be a case of two varieties naturally
crossing, though I want to know the fact for another reason—namely,
because Anemone does not secrete nectar; and secondly, whether Mathiola
incana and glabra, which the writer speaks of as
"crossing freely," were artificially crossed.

Mr. Beaton's statement (July 24, 1860)3 that if the pollen of five
kinds of Geranium (I presume what botanists call varieties, and not
what are called species, are here referred to) are placed on the stigma
of a flower, one kind alone takes the lead and produces an effect,
seems to me a most curious observation. It is, I fear, unreasonable to
ask for a few precise cases on this head; for, as I gather from Mr.
Beaton, it must be difficult to know whether one or more kinds have
produced an effect, owing to the great variability of crossed varieties.

I have been delighted to observe how strongly Mr. Beaton insists
that "not a flower in a thousand is fertilised by its own immediate
pollen."4 This is a subject which I have attended to for the last twenty
years.5 From my experiments on a small scale I would not venture to put
the case nearly as strongly as Mr. Beaton does; but on the other hand,
some of the plants which Mr. Beaton advances as self-fertilisers seem,
as far as I can trust my own observations, doubtful. I will give one
instance, as it might possibly induce some one to try the experiment. Leschenaultia
formosa has apparently the most effectual contrivance to prevent
the stigma of one flower ever receiving a grain of pollen from another
flower; for the pollen is shed in the early bud, and is there shut up
round the stigma within a cup or indusium. But some observation led me
to suspect that nevertheless insect agency here comes into play; for I
found by holding a camel-hair pencil parallel to the pistil, and moving
it as if it were a bee going to suck the nectar, the straggling hairs
of the brush opened the lip of the indusium, entered it, stirred up the
pollen, and brought out some grains. I did this to five flowers and
marked them. These five flowers all set pods; whereas only two other
pods set on the whole plant, though covered with innumerable flowers.
The seeds in these pots were bad, or else I had not skill to make them
germinate. I became so strongly convinced that insects would be found
concerned in the fertilisation of these flowers, that I wrote to Mr.
James Drummond,6 at Swan River in Australia, and asked him to watch the
flowers of plants of this order; and he soon wrote to me that he had
seen a bee cleverly opening the indusium and extracting pollen; and a
bee with its mandibles thus covered with pollen would very likely
effect a cross between one individual and another of the same species.7 I have been told that this pretty plant, the Leschenaultia formosa,
never sets seed in this country. I wish some skilful cultivator would
rout up the pollen within the indusium in the manner described, and see
whether he could not thus get seeds.—CHARLES DARWIN, Down,
Bromley, Kent.8